Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The world of music is not unlike some strange, often decadent
beehive. You have your preening lead singers and showoff guitarists,
which are the equivalent to the mated Queen Bee. The music (and money)
(and drugs) are the honey but what about the worker bees? They are the
ones that do a lot of the work and yet, are often just relegated to
drone status. But a great hive is nothing without its worker bees and
one of the musicians who has had some of the absolute best line-ups is
Prince. Rivaled only by Frank Zappa, Prince is one of those composers
who has always had the best of the best in his band. From the Revolution
to the NPG, dollars to donuts, if you're a musician who has worked with
Prince, you are the true blue real deal.

Out of the countless names on that list, the one that is often
unfairly neglected is Atlanta Bliss aka Matt Blistan. Brought into the
fold during the tail end of the Revolution by fellow jazz
musician/badass, saxophonist Eric Leeds, Blistan's trumpeting skills
added some rich dimension to Prince's music. At times sonically evoking
such greats like Miles Davis, he provided a mix of old school jazz and
new world funk to an instrument that very few associate with megafamous
popular artists.

Plus, the cat's got style. Even from the often brief glimpses of
him in assorted Prince related videos and live footage, the white and
black suits, thick head of dark hair and a mustache that would have fit
in perfectly on Tyrone Powers, all reek of a man cool enough to be
called Atlanta Bliss and get away with it.

Blistan continued to play off and on with Leeds after his time
with Prince, as well as appearing on a number of Paisley Park artists
albums, including George Clinton, Mavis Staples and Carmen Electra. (How
is that for brain frying?) There's not a lot of info about Blistan
after the mid-90's period other than a great home video clip on YouTube
of him tearing it up on "Brazil" at a business conference from the late
2000's. Hopefully this will be an article I can expound upon more in the
near future, but until then, consider this a mini-tribute to a
fantastic trumpet player, great musician and overall cool guy. Matthew
Blistan, thank you for bringing it.